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New Media & Society, Volume 17
Volume 17, Number 1, January 2015
- Steve Jones, David W. Park:
Editorial. 3-5
- Maria Hellman, Charlotte Wagnsson:
New media and the war in Afghanistan: The significance of blogging for the Swedish strategic narrative. 6-23 - Gina Masullo Chen:
Why do women bloggers use social media? Recreation and information motivations outweigh engagement motivations. 24-40 - Rosa Mikeal Martey, Jennifer Stromer-Galley, Mia Consalvo, Jingsi Wu, Jaime Banks, Tomek Strzalkowski:
Communicating age in Second Life: The contributions of textual and visual factors. 41-61 - Timothy Recuber:
Occupy empathy? Online politics and micro-narratives of suffering. 62-77 - Holger Pötzsch:
The emergence of iWar: Changing practices and perceptions of military engagement in a digital era. 78-95 - Michael Chan:
Mobile phones and the good life: Examining the relationships among mobile use, social capital and subjective well-being. 96-113
- Stephen A. Rains, Steven R. Brunner:
What can we learn about social network sites by studying Facebook? A call and recommendations for research on social network sites. 114-131
Volume 17, Number 2, February 2015
- Lucy Bennett, Bertha Chin, Bethan Jones:
Crowdfunding: A New Media & Society special issue. 141-148
- Paul Booth:
Crowdfunding: A Spimatic application of digital fandom. 149-166 - Suzanne Scott:
The moral economy of crowdfunding and the transformative capacity of fan-ancing. 167-182 - Matt Hills:
Veronica Mars, fandom, and the 'Affective Economics' of crowdfunding poachers. 183-197 - Anthony N. Smith:
The backer-developer connection: Exploring crowdfunding's influence on video game production. 198-214 - Megan Farnel:
Kickstarting trans*: The crowdfunding of gender/sexual reassignment surgeries. 215-230 - Suncem Koçer:
Social business in online financing: Crowdfunding narratives of independent documentary producers in Turkey. 231-248 - Alexandra Stiver, Leonor Barroca, Shailey Minocha, Mike Richards, Dave Roberts:
Civic crowdfunding research: Challenges, opportunities, and future agenda. 249-271 - Andrea Hunter:
Crowdfunding independent and freelance journalism: Negotiating journalistic norms of autonomy and objectivity. 272-288 - Roei Davidson, Nathaniel D. Poor:
The barriers facing artists' use of crowdfunding platforms: Personality, emotional labor, and going to the well one too many times. 289-307
- Lars Nyre:
Television and the Meaning of Live. 308-310 - Lee Artz:
The Audience Commodity in a Digital Age: Revisiting a Critical Theory of Commercial Media. 310-312 - Heath Row:
Codename Revolution: The Nintendo Wii Platform. 312-314 - Lois Ann Scheidt:
It's Complicated: The Social Lives of Networked Teens. 314-316 - Alicya Lloyd:
Cached: Decoding the Internet in Global Popular Culture. 316-318
Volume 17, Number 3, March 2015
- Chareen Snelson:
Vlogging about school on YouTube: An exploratory study. 321-339 - Rebecca Tiger:
Celebrity gossip blogs and the interactive construction of addiction. 340-355 - Sander de Ridder:
Are digital media institutions shaping youth's intimate stories? Strategies and tactics in the social networking site Netlog. 356-374 - Nicholas David Bowman, Ron Tamborini:
"In the Mood to Game": Selective exposure and mood management processes in computer game play. 375-393 - Cuihua Shen, Charles Cage:
Exodus to the real world? Assessing the impact of offline meetups on community participation and social capital. 394-414 - Jennifer Petersen:
Is code speech? Law and the expressivity of machine language. 415-431 - Marya L. Doerfel, Müge Haseki:
Networks, disrupted: Media use as an organizing mechanism for rebuilding. 432-452 - Michael L. Mirer, Leticia Bode:
Tweeting in defeat: How candidates concede and claim victory in 140 characters. 453-469
- Dan L. LeMahieu:
Being-Here: Heidegger in the 21st century. 470-475
- Gabriele de Seta:
Memes in digital culture. 476-478 - Rebecca Pero:
Liquid surveillance: A conversation. 478-480
Volume 17, Number 4, April 2015
- Teresa Correa, Joseph D. Straubhaar, Wenhong Chen, Jeremiah Spence:
Brokering new technologies: The role of children in their parents' usage of the internet. 483-500 - Chang-Hyun Jin:
The role of Facebook users' self-systems in generating social relationships and social capital effects. 501-519 - Lillian Boxman-Shabtai, Limor Shifman:
When ethnic humor goes digital. 520-539 - Yuval Dror:
'We are not here for the money': Founders' manifestos. 540-555 - Hang Yin:
Chinese-language Cyberspace, homeland media and ethnic media: A contested space for being Chinese. 556-572 - Sarah Van Leuven, Ansgard Heinrich, Annelore Deprez:
Foreign reporting and sourcing practices in the network sphere: A quantitative content analysis of the Arab Spring in Belgian news media. 573-591 - Rhiannon Bury, Johnson Li:
Is it live or is it timeshifted, streamed or downloaded? Watching television in the era of multiple screens. 592-610 - Nick Geidner, Denae D'Arcy:
The effects of micropayments on online news story selection and engagement. 611-628 - Erika Polson:
A gateway to the global city: Mobile place-making practices by expats. 629-645
Volume 17, Number 5, May 2015
- Wonsun Shin:
Parental socialization of children's Internet use: A qualitative approach. 649-665 - Joost Poort, Ilan Akker, Paul Rutten, Jarst Weda:
Perspectives of creators and performers on the digital era. 666-690 - Lee Edwards, Bethany Klein, David Lee, Giles Moss, Fiona Philip:
'Isn't it just a way to protect Walt Disney's rights?': Media user perspectives on copyright. 691-707 - Taskin Tanrikulu, Hüseyin Kinay, Tolga Aricak:
Sensibility Development Program against Cyberbullying. 708-719 - Lilly Irani:
The cultural work of microwork. 720-739 - Vasilis Kostakis, Wolfgang Drechsler:
Commons-based peer production and artistic expression: Two cases from Greece. 740-754 - Paul Reilly:
Every little helps? YouTube, sousveillance and the 'anti-Tesco' riot in Stokes Croft. 755-771 - Deen Freelon:
Discourse architecture, ideology, and democratic norms in online political discussion. 772-791 - Abbie Grace, Nenagh Kemp, Frances H. Martin, Rauno Parrila:
Undergraduates' attitudes to text messaging language use and intrusions of textisms into formal writing. 792-809 - Renee Barnes:
Understanding the affective investment produced through commenting on Australian alternative journalism website New Matilda. 810-826
Volume 17, Number 6, June 2015
- Irene Serrano Vazquez, Mia Consalvo:
Cheating in social network games. 829-844 - Leighton Evans:
Being-towards the social: Mood and orientation to location-based social media, computational things and applications. 845-860 - Sally M. Gainsbury, Alex Russell, Robert T. Wood, Nerilee Hing, Alex Blaszczynski:
How risky is Internet gambling? A comparison of subgroups of Internet gamblers based on problem gambling status. 861-879 - Masahiro Yamamoto, Matthew J. Kushin, Francis Dalisay:
Social media and mobiles as political mobilization forces for young adults: Examining the moderating role of online political expression in political participation. 880-898 - Alcides Velasquez, Robert LaRose:
Youth collective activism through social media: The role of collective efficacy. 899-918 - Wilma Clark, Nick Couldry, Richard MacDonald, Hilde C. Stephansen:
Digital platforms and narrative exchange: Hidden constraints, emerging agency. 919-938 - Kiri Miller:
Gaming the system: Gender performance in Dance Central. 939-957 - Sanja Kapidzic, Susan C. Herring:
Race, gender, and self-presentation in teen profile photographs. 958-976 - Yong Jin Park:
My whole world's in my palm! The second-level divide of teenagers' mobile use and skill. 977-995
- Pascaline Lorentz:
The collaborative creation of video games: A marriage for love? 996-1002
Volume 17, Number 7, August 2015
- Yin Zhang, Louis Leung:
A review of social networking service (SNS) research in communication journals from 2006 to 2011. 1007-1024 - Cristian Vaccari, Augusto Valeriani:
Follow the leader! Direct and indirect flows of political communication during the 2013 Italian general election campaign. 1025-1042 - Andrea Miconi:
Italy's "Five Stars" movement and the role of a leader: Or, how charismatic power can resurface through the web. 1043-1058 - Mel Stanfill:
The interface as discourse: The production of norms through web design. 1059-1074 - Nerilee Hing, Lorraine Cherney, Sally M. Gainsbury, Dan I. Lubman, Robert T. Wood, Alex Blaszczynski:
Maintaining and losing control during internet gambling: A qualitative study of gamblers' experiences. 1075-1095 - Yang Cheng, Jingwen Liang, Louis Leung:
Social network service use on mobile devices: An examination of gratifications, civic attitudes and civic engagement in China. 1096-1116 - Courtney K. Blackwell, Jeremy P. Birnholtz, Charles Abbott:
Seeing and being seen: Co-situation and impression formation using Grindr, a location-aware gay dating app. 1117-1136 - Karolien Poels, Wijnand A. IJsselsteijn, Yvonne de Kort:
World of Warcraft, the aftermath: How game elements transfer into perceptions, associations and (day)dreams in the everyday life of massively multiplayer online role-playing game players. 1137-1153 - Emese Domahidi, Thorsten Quandt:
"And all of a sudden my life was gone...": A biographical analysis of highly engaged adult gamers. 1154-1169 - Bob De Schutter, Julie A. Brown, Vero Vanden Abeele:
The domestication of digital games in the lives of older adults. 1170-1186
- Danielle Wiese Leek:
Building a cyber-political history of America. 1187-1191
- Jill Walker Rettberg:
Chromatic algorithms: Synthetic color, computer art, and aesthetics after code. 1192-1194 - Murat Akser:
Social movements and their technologies: Wiring social change. 1194-1196
Volume 17, Number 8, September 2015
- Myiah J. Hutchens, Vincent J. Cicchirillo, Jay D. Hmielowski:
How could you think that?!?!: Understanding intentions to engage in political flaming. 1201-1219 - Dewi Tojib, Yelena Tsarenko, Agung Y. Sembada:
The facilitating role of smartphones in increasing use of value-added mobile services. 1220-1240 - Ulrike Klinger, Jakob Svensson:
The emergence of network media logic in political communication: A theoretical approach. 1241-1257 - Pasko Bilic:
'Searching for a centre that holds' in the network society: Social construction of knowledge on, and with, English Wikipedia. 1258-1276 - Julia Tylor:
An examination of how student journalists seek information and evaluate online sources during the newsgathering process. 1277-1298 - Rajesh Kumar, Devam Thapa:
Social media as a catalyst for civil society movements in India: A study in Dehradun city. 1299-1316 - Saleem Alhabash, Anna R. McAlister:
Redefining virality in less broad strokes: Predicting viral behavioral intentions from motivations and uses of Facebook and Twitter. 1317-1339 - Luke J. Heemsbergen:
Designing hues of transparency and democracy after WikiLeaks: Vigilance to vigilantes and back again. 1340-1357 - Saleem Alhabash, Kevin R. Wise:
Playing their game: Changing stereotypes of Palestinians and Israelis through videogame play. 1358-1376 - Brenda L. Berkelaar, Joshua M. Scacco, Jeffrey L. Birdsell:
The worker as politician: How online information and electoral heuristics shape personnel selection and careers. 1377-1396
Volume 17, Number 9, October 2015
- Francis Dalisay, Matthew J. Kushin, Masahiro Yamamoto, Yung-I Liu, Paul Skalski:
Motivations for game play and the social capital and civic potential of video games. 1399-1417 - Tony C. Liao, Lee Humphreys:
Layar-ed places: Using mobile augmented reality to tactically reengage, reproduce, and reappropriate public space. 1418-1435 - Ana Nunes de Almeida, Ana Delicado, Nuno de Almeida Alves, Tiago Carvalho:
Internet, children and space: Revisiting generational attributes and boundaries. 1436-1453 - Cheng-Yu Lai, Heng-Li Yang:
Determinants of individuals' self-disclosure and instant information sharing behavior in micro-blogging. 1454-1472 - Miyase Christensen, André Jansson:
Complicit surveillance, interveillance, and the question of cosmopolitanism: Toward a phenomenological understanding of mediatization. 1473-1491 - Stefania Vicari:
Exploring the Cuban blogosphere: Discourse networks and informal politics. 1492-1512 - Bryce J. Renninger:
"Where I can be myself ... where I can speak my mind" : Networked counterpublics in a polymedia environment. 1513-1529 - Lukasz Szulc:
Banal nationalism and queers online: Enforcing and resisting cultural meanings of .tr. 1530-1546 - Lisa J. Orchard, Chris Fullwood, Neil Morris, Niall Galbraith:
Investigating the Facebook experience through Q Methodology: Collective investment and a 'Borg' mentality. 1547-1565 - Maura Edmond:
All platforms considered: Contemporary radio and transmedia engagement. 1566-1582 - Chris Fullwood, Wendy Nicholls, Rumbidzai Makichi:
We've got something for everyone: How individual differences predict different blogging motivations. 1583-1600
Volume 17, Number 10, November 2015
- Valerie Barker, David M. Dozier, Amy Schmitz Weiss, Diane L. Borden:
Harnessing peer potency: Predicting positive outcomes from social capital affinity and online engagement with participatory websites. 1603-1623 - Wannes Ribbens, Steven Malliet:
How male young adults construe their playing style in violent video games. 1624-1642 - Raz Schwartz, Germaine R. Halegoua:
The spatial self: Location-based identity performance on social media. 1643-1660 - Prabu David, Jung-Hyun Kim, Jared S. Brickman, Weina Ran, Christine M. Curtis:
Mobile phone distraction while studying. 1661-1679 - Dan Hassoun:
"All over the place": A case study of classroom multitasking and attentional performance. 1680-1695 - Shu-Chu Sarrina Li:
Lifestyles and the adoption of information versus entertainment technologies: An examination on the adoption of six new technologies in Taiwan. 1696-1714 - Olessia Koltsova, Andrey Shcherbak:
'LiveJournal Libra!': The political blogosphere and voting preferences in Russia in 2011-2012. 1715-1732 - Danica Radovanovic, Bernie Hogan, Danijela Lalic:
Overcoming digital divides in higher education: Digital literacy beyond Facebook. 1733-1749
- Becky Lentz:
Digital rebellion: The birth of the cyber left. 1750-1752 - Ruth Tsuria:
The mediatization of culture and society. 1752-1754 - Apryl Williams:
Race, gender, and deviance in Xbox live: Theoretical perspectives from the virtual margins. 1754-1755 - Mohamed El Marzouki:
Collaborative media: Production, consumption, and design interventions. 1756-1757
Volume 17, Number 11, December 2015
- Michael Goddard:
Opening up the black boxes: Media archaeology, 'anarchaeology' and media materiality. 1761-1776 - Tilo Hartmann, Ingrid Möller, Christina Krause:
Factors underlying male and female use of violent video games. 1777-1794 - Kristoffer Holt, Michael Karlsson:
"Random acts of journalism?": How citizen journalists tell the news in Sweden. 1795-1810 - David A. Askay:
Silence in the crowd: The spiral of silence contributing to the positive bias of opinions in an online review system. 1811-1829 - Lee McGuigan, Vincent Manzerolle:
"All the world's a shopping cart": Theorizing the political economy of ubiquitous media and markets. 1830-1848 - Ty Hollett, Christian Ehret:
"Bean's World": (Mine) Crafting affective atmospheres of gameplay, learning, and care in a children's hospital. 1849-1866 - Ping Shaw, Yue Tan:
Constructing digital childhoods in Taiwanese children's newspapers. 1867-1885 - Bradley E. Wiggins, G. Bret Bowers:
Memes as genre: A structurational analysis of the memescape. 1886-1906
- Roger Dawkins:
Meaning in the age of social media. 1907-1909 - Wendy L. Bowcher:
Multimodality and social semiosis: Communication, meaning-making, and learning in the work of Gunther Kress. 1909-1911 - Sudeshna Devi:
Indian news media: From observer to participant. 1911-1913 - Jihyun Kim:
Kids on YouTube: Technical identities and digital literacies. 1913-1915
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